Advocates say state budget limits will harm children and local education

By Keith M. Phaneuf

|Connecticut Mirror|

Dec 13, 2018 | 5:01 PM

Social services advocates warned Thursday that a series of new caps in the state budget could dramatically drain resources away from education, other services for children, and local aid over the next decade (File)

Social services advocates warned Thursday that a series of new spending restrictions in the state budget could dramatically drain resources away from education, other services for children, and local aid over the next decade.

Analysts for Connecticut Voices for Children, a New Haven-based policy research group, also cautioned that these spending limits could promote a shift in tax burdens from the wealthy to the middle class and poor.

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“Our kids need to imagine a world where their success seems attainable,” Sharon Langer, interim executive director for Connecticut Voices, said at the group’s annual budget forum at the Capitol. But while nurturing children is one of the state’s top priorities, she added, this goal “is seriously undermined by the way we budget.”

Langer and her colleagues honed in on four new fiscal restraints initially adopted through a bipartisan compromise in November 2017.

Not only are these caps “among the most restrictive in the country,” they undermine fairness in a budget that long has been moving in the wrong direction, said Jamie Mills, director of fiscal policy for Connecticut Voices.

About 40 percent of the state’s budget in 1992 was dedicated to education, health care and other programs that affect children, while the ratio now is about 29 percent, Mills said.

Much of that deterioration is due to surging pension and other retirement benefit costs — a problem created by more than seven decades of inadequate state savings and one expected to grow much worse between now and the mid-2030s.

And as this pension debt grows, these new budgetary caps will constrain overall spending, effectively choking off resources for vital programs and services.

Besides new caps on spending and borrowing, legislators also enacted a “volatility” cap that forces the state to save excess income tax proceeds tied to capital gains and other investment income above a threshold level. Lawmakers can circumvent this cap, but only if 60 percent of the House and Senate vote to do so — a difficult bar to reach.

A fourth cap stipulates that lawmakers can appropriate only 99.5 percent of all estimated revenues, starting in 2020. The other one-half of 1 percent must be saved. This target gradually increases annually until 2 percent must be saved starting in 2026 and continuing at that level thereafter.

Collectively, these caps “reduce the legislature’s ability to make long-term plans,” said Liz McNichol, a senior budget fellow for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington, D.C.-based research center that worked with Connecticut Voices to analyze these fiscal restraints.

The volatility cap makes it very difficult to spend surging income tax receipts, even during a recession when the demand for social services typically is high, McNichol said.

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It also may create “an incentive to raise taxes other than the income tax,” shifting tax burdens on low- and moderate-income households, McNichol added.